Synopsis: Cam Brady (Ferrell) is a Congressman from the 14th District
of North Carolina who has won four straight elections unopposed. But after a
disastrous wrong number call to his mistress goes public, the Motch Brothers
(Dan Akroyd and John Lithgow) – his biggest donors – decide to replace him by funding
a new candidate, the goofy but harmless Marty Huggins (Galifianakas).

REVIEW

Andrew:
Hello readers! Earlier tonight Sarah and I caught the new R-rated comedy The Campaign. Directed by Jay Roach (of the Austin Powers trilogy
fame), it stars Will Ferrell (Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgandy)
and Zach Galifianakas (The Hangover) as two rival
candidates campaigning for the Representative Seat for the 14th
District of North Carolina.

This is one of the movies we
previewed this week. I think it’s safe to say it’s one we’ve been looking
forward to. It has a great pedigree with the director behind it as well as all
the talent involved. But right off the bat I think something that needs to be
said is that The Campaign is the crudest and most vulgar movie I’ve seen
that Roach has directed. It’s a hard R as far as the language goes.

Sarah:
It’s very much in keeping with a Will Ferrell movie. You know, he brought a lot
of raunchiness to the film, not only as his character, but every now and then
he’s known for comedic roles where he’s be vulgar.

A:
Yeah, but not like this! He’s throwing around tons of f-bombs and the s-word
and the c-word (I would normally just say them, but we try to keep this blog as
family friendly as we can!)…

S: Ok,
yeah there’s a lot of dirty language in that respect.

A: I
honestly can’t remember the last film I’ve seen Ferrell talk this dirty.

The Campaign is definitely the most vulgar movie we've seen Will Ferrell in. This look Zach Galifianakas' Marty Huggins is giving Ferrell's Cam Brady is because of a particularly dirty line.

S: I
don’t know, we’d have to go back and look. Maybe Wedding Crashers or Old
School. But there’s not a whole lot of sexual vulgarity. There’s SOME,
particularly early on, but nothing too explicit.

I think it’s safe to say,
though, that it was very funny. And I really, really enjoyed the chemistry
between Ferrell and Galifianakas. It was refreshingly different from his
chemistry with John C. Reilly. It was a smart film, it was witty and very much
a poke at the whole political scene. So I found it funny – not roll on the
floor, laugh-a-minute, but funny nonetheless.

A:
It’s not laugh-a-minute but a lot of it is maybe laugh-every-other-minute
because they throw so many jokes out there. There’s a lot of shtick in The
Campaign. There’s a lot of Ferrell’s usual shtick and Galifianakas’ shtick
and sometimes it’s a little much. In particular, one scene where Ferrell’s Cam
Brady has gone pretty bonkers and is raging around the office.

But other than that, I think
they balance a fine line between the actors’ strengths as well as having a great
supporting cast. Dan Akroyd (Ghostbusters) and John Lithgow (3rd
Rock From the Sun) fair well though are underused. Dylan McDermott (American
Horror Story) and Jason Sudeikis (Horrible Bosses) are funny in their
supporting roles as campaign managers. And then you have Brian Cox (Super
Troopers) as Marty’s dad and his maid, Mrs. Yao (played by Karen
Maruyama) who is probably the funniest recurring gag in the movie.

S:
Yeah I think she’s my favorite character in the whole movie. Althought
Galifianakas…when he does his different voices I find him quite humorous. I
just want to hug him. He’s so funny and I really enjoyed him.

A: A
lot of my favorite scenes had to do with scenes where I couldn’t tell if it was
scripted or improvised, but the dinner scene with Marty’s family where he tells
his family it’s okay to tell him their secrets. It had me going pretty good.
Then I don’t know why, but I loved the on-going joke about Marty’s pugs and
Cam’s reaction to them. I honestly think I squeaked at one time because I was
trying to hold in my laughter since I seemed to be the only one laughing.

I found the whole film
pretty funny. Again, it’s VERY vulgar so do NOT take kids to this. It is NOT a
kids movie.

S: No
it’s not. Tons of bad language, but clever. I found it very clever.

We didn't mention it elsewhere in the review, but our favorite joke is actually one about Dylan McDermott here and another actor whose name we get confused with a lot.

A: It
was a nice satire on the whole idea of how politics work and the tactics people
use and what might actually be going on with donors like Akroyd and Lithgow’s
Motch Brothers being the puppeteers to Cam and Marty’s puppets.

S: Good
point! And I wanted to mention how outrageous some of the humor is, too! Like
when Cam accidentally punches a baby and then later hits another thing that’s
possibly even funnier. At least it was to us.

Overall I think my
expectations weren’t exactly met. I think they may have been a little too high.
But I think this is one of those movies, like a lot of Ferrell’s and these
kinds of comedies where you need to watch it more than once. There’s a ton of
one-liners that can be taken from here and probably will.

A:
Agreed. I will say that, like I said in our preview, my expectations were a
little lower because of The Watch and how it was also a
R-rated comedy with a good pedigree behind it and it was bad. The
Campaign is better than The Watch, hands down. So it
exceeded my expectations.

But I will say one other
negative thing – there were times, and this is because Ferrell went to his
usual pool, that he sounded exactly like Ricky Bobby. He plays a Southern
character again, had the same inflection again though maybe with a hint of his
George W. Bush impression from Saturday Night Live, but it’s not a bad thing.
It just kinda took me out of it for a second.

Overall, I thoroughly
enjoyed it, and personally I think it’s one we’re going to own some day.

S:
Probably! I also thoroughly enjoyed it! You don’t necessarily need to see it in
theatres but it’s definitely a great way to kill a Saturday afternoon or a fun
evening at the movies in general!

2 comments:

Great review guys! I think it's really gotten me close to seeing it this weekend. I've been on the fence with the flick because I'm not quite sure about it, but the more reviews I read the more I think I'll check it out. I'll let you know if I watch it and thus spam you both with my review. :)